Feeding Horses with Neurologic Disease

The main goals of feeding horses with neurologic disease are to supplement vitamin E and ensure that these horses continue eating a good-quality, balanced diet. Some horses with neurologic disease will have impaired balance and gait abnormalities that will prevent them from being turned out. If safe for the horse and handlers, some hand-grazing allows access to fresh grass and serves as physical therapy for the horse.

Horses with neurologic disease often have trouble balancing, especially when they lower their heads. Feeding hay in hay nets or placing feed on top of a straw bale makes it easier for neurologic horses to eat. These horses are sometimes reluctant to move around their stalls, so it is important to keep hay, feed, and water near each other, especially if the horse has difficulty moving around.

Many veterinarians prescribe vitamin E supplementation for the treatment of equine neurologic diseases because of its neuroprotective effects. The usual recommended dose of micellized natural vitamin E (water-soluble d-α-tocopherol) for horses with neurologic disease is 5,000-10,000 IU (international units) by mouth every 24 hours. This is approximately 10-20 times the dietary requirement for an 1,100-pound (500-kg) horse. --Bryan Waldridge, DVM, Kentucky Equine Research

Featured Adoptable Horse

Buddy

Buddy is a great trail horse. Requires alumniumm Eggbar front shoes as he is tenderfooted. Has been hauled and ridden all over the southeast. He is not a problem to ride but will buck or crow hop when asked to canter (work...he is lazy) Owner ... Read More